Council for Tobacco Research
for Release After 11 00 A.M. Wednesday, October 25, 1972 [Read's Retirement; Biographical Data Related to Education, Employment and Accomplishments]
Fields
- Type
- PRESS RELEASE
- Depository Date
- 29 Feb 1996
- Named Person
- Read, C.R.
- Acs
- Tobacco And Cancer
- Intl Union Against Cancer
- Natl Broadcasting
- Wevd
- Amer Civil Liberties Union
- Ny Office, O.F. War Information
- Afhq
- Us Information Service
- Waldorf Astoria
- Princeton Univ
- Acs
- Request
- 131
- Author
- Acs
- Box
- 104
- Site
- Hockett
- UCSF Legacy ID
- jhr2aa00
Document Images
AMERI
CANCER
AlN
SOCIETY
NEWS SERVICE
~I 219 EASI 42nd STREET
NEw YORK, N. Y. 10017
(2121 B673700
Hrii,uJ06105
FOR RELEASE AFTER 11:00 A.M., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1972:
NEW YORK, NEW YORK: -- A man whomade a career of using the power of
mass communications to help save thousands of lives from cancer,
Clifton R. Read, former Vice President for Public Information of the
American Cancer Society, was honored on his retirement at the Soc iety's
Annual Meeting here today.
For example, when Read started at the Society as publicity director
in 1936, uterine cancer was killing more American women than any other
form of the diaease. Read helped educate women to the importance of
the Pap test for the early diagnosis of a common form of uterine cancer
that is highly curable if caught early. Today, the death rate has been
cut in half. But, it was a tremendous job in public relations just to
introduce a word like "uterine" into the mass media.
Read went on to an even more difficult battle -- the fight against
cigarette smoking. At the time of his retirement, Read was Senior
Editor and Consultant on Tobacco and Cancer and managed the 1967 World
Conference on Smoking and Health. Until 1968 he headed the ACS Depart-
mernt of Public Information, He also served as Chairman of the Public
Education Committee of the International Union Against Cancer, head-
quartered in Geneva, Switzerland.
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- more

h WUO31 06
At the Board Meeting today, Read was giyen a Distinguished Service
Award hailing him as a "pioneer in health communications," who made
the control;of cancer the "driving force of his career." The award
was presented at the Board Meeting, Wednesday morning in the Waldorf-
Astoria. ACS volunteers from all parts of the nation were present.
Read was born in Minnesota,;educated at Princeton, and resides
~
in New York City and Cornwall Bridge, Connecticut. Before joining the
ACS, he worked as a writer for the National Broadcasting Co., was
Program Director of Radio Station WEVD, and Publicity Director for
the American Civil Liberties Union. Serving as ACS Publicity Director
from 1936 to 1941 he returned to the non-profit, voluntary agency in
1948 and became head of Public Education and Information in 1952. He
was with the Society during its time of greatest growth.
During the Second World War, Read was Regional Director of the
New York Office of War Information and later served with the Psycholo-
gical Warfare Branch, AFHQ in the Mediterranean Theater and established
the U.S. Information Service in Yugoslavia.
The Reads have two children and two grandchildren.
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